This is a copy-paste of some tips I gave my cohort before the HSC exam this year. My advice is to just study regularly, make syllabus notes every day after you learn the content in class/tutoring so you don't have to make them before hand. Start past-papers early (before half yearlies ideally), especially HSC ones as my school loved to throw in HSC questions. Good luck!
LAST MINUTE TIPS
Calculations
- Always write out a balanced equation with states if there is a reaction taking place.
- Find the moles of everything, use limiting reagents if need be and use stoichiometry to determine what you want to find.
- Sig figs use the least in the question. If multipart, write a couple more decimal places in your second last line then round in your final line.
EXAM TECHNIQUE
- Use subheadings, try to avoid massive slabs of text and paragraphs. The marker will be able to easily see which parts of the criteria you addressed and give you marks easily. They will mark lots of papers so make it easy for them!!
- Again chuck in equations, statistics, diagrams, data (e.g safety limits for heavy metal concentrations) where appropriate.
- Look at the marks, and try to mentally make up a quick marking criteria (as in, where would they allocate the marks in this question?)
READING TIME
- This is what I like to do, might not work for everybody.
- Spend 2-3 minutes flicking through paper, reading the long answers especially and form a mental plan of what I want to write. Allows me to see what I have to know and what I don't (what info I can let go because its not in the exam)
- Spend the rest mentally going through the first 5ish questions of MC.
- PLEASE READ THE QUESTION CAREFULLY (for example, isomer multiple choice in JR trial paper which H posted is tricky).
ASSESS/EVALUATE
- Brief general statement/intro to what the question is asking (optional)
- Include a criteria for evaluate
- Evidence and for/against.
- Provide an assessment/evaluation at the end
DISCUSS
- Brief general statement/intro to what the question is asking (optional)
- For/Against
EDIT
- X and Y brought up that we should underline key points to make them stand out.
- Z mentioned that in compare questions we should describe similarities and differences. Tables are likely preferred.